101. Evolution of theOalleles of the human ABO blood group gene
- Author
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Jaume Bertanpetit, Stéphanie Despiau, Francis Roubinet, Antoine Blancher, Francesc Calafell, Naruya Saitou, and Fen Jin
- Subjects
Genetics ,biology ,Immunology ,Hematology ,Acetylgalactosamine ,Transplantation ,Antigen ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,ABO blood group system ,parasitic diseases ,Glycosyltransferase ,biology.protein ,Immunology and Allergy ,Allele ,Gene ,Rh blood group system - Abstract
It is the most important blood group system in transfusion and transplantation practices. It was also the first human genetic system to be applied to anthropologic studies. The A and B alleles of the ABO gene code for glycosyltransferases that either add an N -acetylgalactosamine or a galactose to various glycoconjugates. These products result in A or B bloodgroup-specific antigens. The O allele corresponds to a silent (null) allele of the ABO gene. The cDNAs of the three major alleles of the human blood group ABO system were first described by Yamamoto and coworkers.
- Published
- 2004